moa-one in seven
TRANSCRIPT
-
7/27/2019 MOA-One in Seven
1/40
ONE INSEVEN
MEASUREOFAMERICAof the Social Science Research Council
Patrick Nolan Guyer | CHIEF STATISTICIAN
Neil Bennett | SENIOR STATISTICAL ADVISOR
Shreya Subramani | RESEARCH ASSISTANT
Diana Tung | REPORT DESIGN
KRISTEN LEWISSARAH BURD-SHARPS
Made possible through the generous support of the
RANKING YOUTHDISCONNECTION IN
THE 25 LARGESTMETRO AREAS
TO DOWNLOAD THIS REPORT, PLEASE VISIT WWW.MEASUREOFAMERICA.ORG
-
7/27/2019 MOA-One in Seven
2/40
Contents
Introduction...............................................................................................................1
What Do the Numbers Show?....................................................................................5
Metro Area Snapshots...............................................................................................8
Youth Disconnection: Why Does It Matter and Who Is at Risk?...............................18
The Way Forward: Preventing Disconnection..........................................................26
Conclusion...............................................................................................................33
References..............................................................................................................34
Acknowledgments
Our first thanks must go to the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation, which is dedicated to having ameasurable impact on the lives of vulnerable young people around the world. The Foundationhas supported Measure of America from its inception. We are grateful to our reviewersMarkLevitan, Bill Pitkin, Kevin Rafter, Anne Stanton, and Kenji Treanorfor offering their expertise andinvaluable guidance.
This report benefited from an excellent background paper by Kevin Kennedy on the history ofvocational and technical education in the United States. Finally, we give thanks to our dedicatedteam of Patrick Guyer, Shreya Subramani, and Diana Tung, and to Bob Land for his careful andsensitive editing.
-
7/27/2019 MOA-One in Seven
3/40
O N E I N S E V E NRanking Youth Disconnection in the 25 Largest Metro Areas
All around the country, the rhythms of the academic year have begun. Recent college grads lucky
enough to have jobs in this tough market are growing accustomed to the cadence of the workingworld, with its new structure, new social connections, and the start of a new identity.
But some young Americans are not part of Septembers yearly promise of new beginnings. An
astonishing one in seven American adolescents and young adults ages 16 to 24 is neither working
nor in school; we call such status disconnected. This isolation from societys anchor structures
is costly to individuals, communities, and the country as a whole. This paper ranks the countrys
twenty-five most populous metropolitan areasand racial and ethnic groups within those areas
in terms of youth disconnection. Key findings include the following:
The youth disconnection rate is 14.7 percent for the country as a whole5.8 million young
people in all. This number swelled by over 800,000 during the Great Recession.
Of the twenty-five largest metropolitan areas, Boston and MinneapolisSt. Paul perform
the best, with fewer than one in ten young people disconnected from the worlds of school
and work. In Phoenix, the bottom-ranking city, nearly one in five is disconnected.
Of the countrys major racial and ethnic groups, African Americans have the highest rate
of youth disconnection, at 22.5 percent. Pittsburgh, Seattle, Detroit, and Phoenix have the
highest African American rates: more than one in four African American young people are
disconnected. Latinos have the second-highest national youth disconnection rate, at 18.5
percent. In Boston, New York, and Phoenix, more than one in five Latino young people are
disconnected.
Youth Disconnection Rate by Race and Ethnicity
Young men are more likely to be disconnected than young women. However, among
Latinos ages 16 to 24, women have higher rates of disconnection than men.
Youth disconnection mirrors adult disconnection. Household poverty rates and the
employment and educational status of community adults are strongly associated with youth
disconnection. The paper concludes by exploring strategies and programs that have increased
youth connection at home and abroad.
African
American
U.S.
Average
Asian
American
White Latino
8% 11.7% 18.5% 22.5%14.7%
-
7/27/2019 MOA-One in Seven
4/40
ONE IN SEVEN | Ranking Youth Disconnection in the 25 Largest Metro Areas 1
Introduction
All around the country, the rhythms of the academic year have begun
anew. College students are back on campus. High schoolers are settling
in to their classes and reconnecting with old friends, teachers, and
coaches. Recent grads lucky enough to have found jobs in this tough
market are growing accustomed to the cadence of the working world,
which has brought to their lives new structure, new social connections,
and the start of a new identity.
But some young Americans are not part of Septembers yearly
promise of new beginnings. Nor are they embarking on careers and
adjusting to the expectations of the workplace. Nationwide, more than
5.8 million young peopleabout one in seven teenagers and young
adults between the ages of 16 and 24are neither working nor in
school. Rather than laying the foundation for a productive life of choice
and value, these disconnected youth find themselves adrift at societys
margins, unmoored from the systems and structures that confer
knowledge, skills, identity, and purpose.
The problem of youth disconnection is serious and costly, both
for young people themselves and for society. It is also a problem that
worsened significantly during the Great Recession; after a decade of
relatively stable rates, the rolls of the disconnected surged by over
800,000 young people between 2007 and 2010.
Emerging adulthood, the years that stretch from the late teens tothe mid-twenties, is a critical period for forming ones adult identity
and moving toward independence and self-sufficiency.1 The effects
of disconnectionlimited education, social exclusion, lack of work
experience, and fewer opportunities to develop mentors and valuable
work connectionsat this juncture can have long-term consequences
that snowball across the life course, coming to affect everything from
earnings and self-sufficiency to physical and mental health and marital
prospects.
For society, the consequences are also grave: a labor force with too
few skilled workers to compete in todays globalized, knowledge-basedeconomy; greater need for public assistance; the high costs of crime,
incarceration, and poor physical and mental health; and a heightened
risk that the next generation will be caught in the same cycle. The bottom
line: direct support costs and lost tax revenues associated with adrift
young people set U.S. taxpayers back by more than $93 billion in 2011
alone.2 And this bill compounds as time goes on.
Disconnected youth
are young peopleages 1624 who arenot in school and notworking.
One
in seventeenagers
and young
adults between
the ages of 16
and 24 are neither
working nor in school.
-
7/27/2019 MOA-One in Seven
5/40
ONE IN SEVEN | Ranking Youth Disconnection in the 25 Largest Metro Areas 2
Evolving social norms coupled with a labor market that now demands
more educated workers have made the transition to a successful
adulthood a lengthier, costlier, and more complicated process than it was
in the past. A generation ago, young men had a variety of clear, accessible
pathways to jobs that could support a family. Even boys who did not
complete high school could find a role in manufacturing, on a farm, in thefamily business, or in the military, and jobs available to such teenagers
often progressed into lifelong careers. This brief will show that this group
of boys and young men in todays economy face the greatest challenges.
In 1960, the unemployment rate for men aged 16 to 19 was around 15
percent, half what it is today for that age group. The rate for men 20
and older was just 4.7 percent.3 The typical age at first marriage was
roughly 20 years for women and 23 years for men,4 and children often
soon followed. These norms had significant downsides, of course: girls
and women had limited access to higher education and few employment
opportunities. In addition, discriminatory laws and practices blockedAfrican Americans access to a wide range of educational and career
paths.
Today, markers of adulthood, the sequence for acquiring them,
and expectations about the timeline for doing so are no longer widely
shared.5 Social norms around marriage, childbearing, caregiving, and
female labor force participation have changed dramatically as well.
These changes have been beneficial in some ways and detrimental in
others. They have broadened the range of opportunities available to
young people, particularly to young women, to live freely chosen lives
and to fulfill their potential. Yet shifts in the labor market have served to
diminish the opportunities open to young people with limited education;
very few career ladders today have bottom rungs that a teenager with a
high school diploma or less could hope to reach.
However, while some study beyond high school is now absolutely
necessary for economic security, the college for all mantrawith
college understood as a four-year bachelors degreeis blocking out
meaningful alternatives for some young adults and sending the message
that anything else is second best. More constructive approaches would
involve creating robust pathways to certificate or associate degree
programs linked to apprenticeships, job placement, and other supports,
and destigmatizing both career and technical high school programs and
postsecondary options that do not include a four-year degree.
Examples of education and workforce development programs that
are successfully addressing these needs and offering young people viable
alternatives appear below.
Though public debate about the transition to adulthood has been
dominated of late by considerable handwringing about overinvolved
TheUnitedStates has 5.8 milliondisconnected youtha figure roughly onpar with the entirepopulation of Wisconsinor Maryland.
-
7/27/2019 MOA-One in Seven
6/40
helicopter parents, this paper focuses on young people whose families
and communities lack many of the resources, skills, social networks, and
level of public investment required to shepherd them through this critical
period of life. They are the young people most in need of innovative
strategies and targeted investments to harness and direct their talents.
The pages that follow explore the degree to which young people in ourcountrys largest metropolitan areas are making the transition to a
productive adulthood, why some groups are being left behind, and what
might be done to foster greater youth connection.
Measure of America, a project of the Social Science Research Council, is a nonpartisan project to
provide easy-to-use, yet methodologically sound tools for understanding well-being and opportunity
in the United States and to stimulate fact-based dialogue about issues we all care about: health,
education, and living standards.
The root of this work is the human development and capabilities approach, the brainchild of Harvard
professor and Nobel Laureate Amartya Sen. Human development is about improving peoples well-
being and expanding their choices and opportunities to live freely chosen lives of value. The period of
young adulthood is critical to developing the capabilities required to live a good life: knowledge and
credentials, social skills and networks, a sense of mastery and agency, an understanding of ones
strengths and preferences, and the ability to handle stressful events and regulate ones emotions, to
name just a few. Measure of America is thus concerned with youth disconnection because it stunts
human development, closing off some of lifes most rewarding and joyful paths and leading to a future
of limited horizons and unrealized potential.
-
7/27/2019 MOA-One in Seven
7/40
Who Are Americas Disconnected Youth?
Disconnected YouthConnected Youth
33,691,218
young adults
5,808,827
young adults
Source: Measure of America analysis of U.S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey 2010 PUMS Microdata.Note: Women with children includes biological, step, and adopted children.
EDUCATION
EDUCATION
YOUNG MOTHERHOOD
DISABILITY
POVERTY
21%
lives in a poorhousehold
14%dropped out of
high school
20%highest degree is
high school diploma
or equivalent
10%women with
children
35%women with
children
13%with a disability
4%with a disability
46%highest degree is
high school diploma
or equivalent
33%dropped out of
high school
39%
lives in a poorhousehold
POVERTY
EDUCATION
EDUCATION
YOUNG MOTHERHOOD
DISABILITY
53%51% 47%49%
-
7/27/2019 MOA-One in Seven
8/40
ONE IN SEVEN | Ranking Youth Disconnection in the 25 Largest Metro Areas 5
TABLE 1 Neighborhood Variation within Select Metro Areas
OVERALL LEAST DISCONNECTED NEIGHBORHOOD MOST DISCONNECTED NEIGHBORHOODMETRO AREA D I S C O N N E C T E D Y O U T H ( % )
Boston 9.0 Allston, Brighton, Fenway, Kenmore 3.2 City of Brockton 18.4
Los Angeles 14.2 West LA 3.5 Watts 25.1
New York 15.2 Parts of Nassau County 3.7 Parts of the South Bronx 35.6
San Francisco 12.4 Berkeley 3.3 Oakland-Elmhurst 25.0
Washington, DC 11.3 Northwest Washington, DC 2.9 Southeast Washington, DC 33.1
Source: Measure of Americaanalysis of U.S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey PUMS Microdata 20062010.
What Do the Numbers Show?
This section explores the question of youth disconnection from several
different angles, making comparisons by major U.S. metropolitan area;
by race, ethnicity, and gender; and within the international context
of other affluent democracies. BOX 1 on page 13 contains a detailed
discussion of who is included in the disconnected youth category.
DISCONNECTED YOUTH: METROPOLITAN AREA RANKINGS
The countrys twenty-five most populous metropolitan areas (see TABLE
2) are home to roughly 40 percent of Americans. On the whole, people
living in these metropolitan areastwenty-five central cities and thesurrounding towns, suburbs, and exurbs that have significant economic
and social ties to that core cityenjoy higher levels of well-being than
the average American, making the plight of disconnected youth there
more poignantbut also offering hope for change.
The top-performing metro areas are Boston (9 percent),
MinneapolisSt. Paul (9.3 percent), San Diego (11.1 percent),
Washington, DC (11.3 percent), and Philadelphia (11.9 percent).
The metro areas with the highest rates of youth disconnectionare Atlanta (16.9 percent), RiversideSan Bernardino (16.9
percent), Detroit (17 percent), Miami (17.1 percent), and in last
place, Phoenix (18.8 percent), where nearly one out of every five
young people is disengaged from the structure and meaning that
school and work bring to daily life.
Least Disconnection
1.Boston2. MinneapolisSt. Paul3. San Diego4. Washington, DC5. Philadelphia
Most Disconnection
21. Atlanta22. Riverside
San Bernardino23. Detroit24. Miami25. Phoenix
-
7/27/2019 MOA-One in Seven
9/40
ONE IN SEVEN | Ranking Youth Disconnection in the 25 Largest Metro Areas 6
In addition to uneven rates of disconnection from one city to
another, wide disparities are in evidence within each of these metro
areas by neighborhood clusters, ranging from parts of Delaware County
in the Philadelphia metro area, where only 2.6 percent of youth aredisconnected, to Mott Haven, Melrose, and Hunts Point in the South
Bronx, New York City, where the corresponding rate is 35.6 percent.
TABLE 1 offers a snapshot of the greatest neighborhood variation in five
large metro areas. These neighborhoods are defined by the U.S. Census
Bureau and are referred to as Public Use Microdata Areas (PUMAs). They
contain at least 100,000 people, and most are under 200,000.
TABLE 2 Disconnected Youth in the 25 Largest Metro Areas, by Race and Ethnicity
ALLAFRICAN
AMERICANASIAN
AMERICAN LATINO WHITE
RANK METRO AREA DISCONNECTED YOUTH (%)
United States 14.7 22.5 8.0 18.5 11.7
1 Boston 9.0 13.1 20.2 6.6
2 MinneapolisSt. Paul 9.3 22.5 7.2
3 San Diego 11.1 12.1 5.7 13.3 9.1
4 Washington, DC 11.3 19.0 7.6 11.7 7.0
5 Philadelphia 11.9 19.7 19.2 8.0
6 Pittsburgh 11.9 26.3 9.4
7 San Francisco 12.4 19.7 7.1 17.9 7.9
8 Chicago 13.3 24.0 16.1 8.1
9 Denver 13.4 15.8 19.1 11.0
10 St. Louis 13.4 23.1 10.6
11 DallasFt. Worth 14.2 21.4 16.5 10.3
12 Los Angeles 14.2 21.0 7.6 17.1 10.2
13 Baltimore 14.2 22.1 18.4 9.7
14 Sacramento 14.3 17.9 18.8 12.3
15 Portland 14.3 18.0 13.5
16 Seattle 14.7 26.9 19.5 13.3
17 New York 15.2 21.7 9.8 20.6 9.8
18 TampaSt. Petersburg 15.7 16.8 19.7 13.3
19 Houston 15.7 20.6 8.5 17.2 12.2
20 San Antonio 15.9 17.2 11.6
21 Atlanta 16.9 23.2 19.4 12.0
22 RiversideSan Bernardino 16.9 21.4 18.5 14.523 Detroit 17.0 25.3 19.2 13.5
24 Miami 17.1 23.3 17.0 12.5
25 Phoenix 18.8 28.2 23.5 13.3
Data unavailable because there are too few 16- to 24-year-olds to allow for reliable calculations.Source: Measure of America analysis of U.S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey 2010 PUMS Microdata.
-
7/27/2019 MOA-One in Seven
10/40
ONE IN SEVEN | Ranking Youth Disconnection in the 25 Largest Metro Areas 7
As the ranking table demonstrates, significant variation exists within
metro areas by race and ethnicity. In the five metro areas at the bottom of
the ranking, for example, the youth disconnection rate for whites is lower
than the national average. Variation by neighborhood within metro areas
can also span a considerable range. A closer look at top-ranked Boston
provides a vivid illustration. The Boston metro area has the lowest rate ofyouth disconnection of the twenty-five largest cities. However, in marked
contrast to Bostons 9 percent overall average, in the areas of Mission Hill
and Roxbury, over 16 percent of young people are disconnected, and the
rates in East Boston, Revere, Winthrop, and the City of Brockton are even
higher.
Several points underlie these statistics (see TABLE 3). One is that
comparatively few adults in these areas have completed a four-year
college degree. Another is that these areas have a higher proportion of
people of color than other parts of Boston. While Boston is first overall in
low rates of disconnected youth, among Latinos, Boston ranks third fromthe bottom, with youth disconnection rates just above that of New York and
Phoenix. Latino youth in the Boston metro area are more than twice as
likely as other young Bostonians to be out of school and work, and three
times as likely as Boston whites. The predominantly African American
neighborhoods of Mission Hill and Roxbury struggle with high adult
unemployment rates.
In short, the situation of youth in Boston is a mirror of adults
employment and education status. Neighborhoods in which adults have
solid educational credentials and high employment rates also tend to be
home to young people with higher rates of school and work attachment.
An in-depth exploration of youth disconnection in each of these twenty-five
metro areas can be found in the METRO AREA SNAPSHOTS.
TABLE 3 Characteristics of Three Boston Communities with the Highest Rate of Disconnection
DISCONNECTEDYOUTH
(%)
ADULTUNEMPLOYMENT
(%)
POVERTY(%)
BACHELOR'SDEGREE ORHIGHER (%)
AFRICANAMERICAN
(%)
ASIANAMERICAN
(%)
LATINO(%)
WHITE(%)
Boston 9.0 8.1 10.3 43.O 6.6 6.4 9.O 74.9
Mission Hill,Roxbury
16.3 12.8 31.7 18.6 60.2 3.4 22.2 9.7
East Boston,Revere, Winthrop(near airport)
17.6 7.0 17.2 19.3 4.9 4.0 33.0 55.3
City of Brockton 18.4 8.8 12.8 18.8 28.4 2.2 8.5 54.8
Source: Measure of America analysis of U.S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey, 2010 and 20062010.
-
7/27/2019 MOA-One in Seven
11/40
Metro Area Snapshots
Bostonhas the lowest share of youth who are disconnected, a rate of 9 percent, among the twenty-five most populous metroareas. The key to Bostons top position is education. With more than fifty institutions of higher education, Boston is home
to transplanted students from across the country and around the world. But Boston does not just excel in access to higher
education. The metro area has very low high school dropout rates and some of the highest preschool enrollment rates of this
group of twenty-five metro areas. Adults in Boston today have high rates of educational attainment: nine in ten have at least a
high school diploma (the fourth highest rate among major metro areas); 43 percent have bachelors degrees; and 19 percent
have graduate degrees. The correlation between the poverty rate and youth disconnection rate is strong, this study shows.
Boston has the second-lowest poverty rate, 10.3 percent, and the second-lowest child poverty rate, 11.9 percent. The Boston
metro area also has one of the lowest percentage of teenagers 16 to 19 who are mothers.
However, Boston has a high rate of Latino youth disconnection; only two metro areas perform worse. While Boston has a
relatively low percentage of African American disconnected youth compared to other metro areas, African American youth are
still twice as likely to be disconnected as white youth, while Latino youth are three times as likely to be disconnected as white
youth.
The MinneapolisSt. Paul metro area ranks second, with a youth disconnection rate of 9.3 percent. Educational attainment
among adults, which correlates strongly with greater connection among young people, is high. Ninety-three percent of
MinneapolisSt. Paul adults over age 25 have at least a high school diplomathe highest percentage among the cities in this
study. The dropout rate, 13.1 percent, is the countrys second lowest.
1
H
12
325
10
12
11
19
21
20
7
15
22
14
16
4
18
24
517
13
68
23
9
2
-
7/27/2019 MOA-One in Seven
12/40
MinneapolisSt. Paul has the third-lowest poverty rate, tied with San Francisco, 10.9 percent, and it also has the fourth-
lowest unemployment rate, 8.8 percent. This metro area also has the highest labor force participation of 16 to 24 year-olds
in the top twenty-five metro areas. But extremely large racial gaps exist in the Twin Cities. African American youth have the
highest disconnection rate, 22.5 percent. African Americans are more than three times as likely to be disconnected as whites
arethe second-largest disparity of the metro areas in this study after Pittsburgh.
San Diego ranks third; 11.1 percent of youth ages 1624approximately 50,000 teens and young adultsare disconnected.San Diego has the fourth-lowest dropout rate among the metro areas in this study as well as the third-lowest unemployment
rate for youth ages 1624, 16.9 percent. Adults in San Diego have educational attainment levels above the national average.
Differences by neighborhood, however, are striking. In the southwestern communities of San Diego County, including Imperial
Beach, almost one in five (18.9 percent) are disconnected. In the affluent coastal communities between Torrey Pines and
Mission Bay, roughly one in every twenty-eight youth (3.6 percent) are disconnected.
Washington, D.C., ranks fourth, with a youth disconnection rate of 11.3. The D.C. metro area has the highest percentage of
adults with postsecondary educational credentials; roughly 47 percent hold bachelors degrees, and 22 percent hold graduate
degrees. The city comprises a sizeable population of transplants, luring highly credentialed individuals from around the county
with well-paying jobs. Washington, D.C., has the lowest poverty rate among the twenty-five largest metro areas, and the highest
median earnings per year, just over $43,000. D.C. also has the lowest unemployment rate among this group.
The overall picture masks huge gaps by neighborhood, however. In Northwest D.C., fewer than 3 percent of youth are
disconnected, whereas in Southeast D.C., an astonishing 33 percent of youth arean eleven-fold difference.
The nearly tied Pennsylvania metro areas of Philadelphia and Pittsburgh rank fifth and sixth, with a youth disconnection rate
of 11.9. Both metro areas perform well overall in terms of educational enrollment and attainment. Pittsburgh has the second-
highest enrollment rate for 16 to 24 year-olds, and Philadelphia has the third-highest. Both metro areas are above the national
average in terms of preschool enrollment; in Pittsburgh, almost six in ten 3 to 4 year-olds are enrolled in preschool, the third-
highest enrollment rate among the twenty-five largest metro areas; in Philadelphia, 56.9 percent are. Nine in ten Pittsburgh
adults have at least a high school diploma, the second-highest percentage among the metro areas in this study. It also has the
lowest dropout rate, 13 percent. The educational attainment rates of Philadelphias adults are higher than the national average.
In terms of employment, Pittsburgh has the second-lowest unemployment rate of adults 16 and over, after Washington,
D.C. Philadelphia has a slightly higher unemployment rate for adults ages 16 and over, 10.6 percent.
In Philadelphia, nearly one in every five Latino and African American youth are disconnected; young people of color
are more than twice as likely as white youth to be disconnected. Pittsburgh, too, struggles with racial disparities; despite its
strengths in promoting youth connectedness, one in every four African American young people in Pittsburgh are disconnected.
Pittsburgh has the largest gap in youth disconnection between African American and white youth of any metro area in this study.
San Francisco ranks seventh, with a youth disconnection rate of 12.4 percent. San Francisco is home to a high percentage of
well-educated residents, ranking second in terms of adults with at least a bachelors degree (43.4 percent). San Francisco has
the third-highest overall school enrollment, with nearly eight in ten 16- to 24-year-olds enrolled in school. This metro area has
the second-highest median earnings, $40,300 per year. San Francisco has the third-lowest poverty rate, 10.9 percent, and third-
lowest child poverty rate, 13.3 percent. Stark differences separate neighborhoods and racial and ethnic groups, however. The
youth disconnection rate in East Oakland is almost eight times that of Berkeley. The African American youth disconnection rate
is 19.7, the Latino rate is 17.9, the white rate is 7.9, and the Asian American rate is 7.1.
Chicago ranks eighth, with a youth disconnection rate of 13.3 percent. The large and diverse Chicago metro area is a study in
contrasts. Overall, the educational attainment and enrollment rates in Chicago are somewhat above the national average, and
the poverty rates among both children and adults are slightly better than average. However, unemployment rates are higher.
A racial breakdown of Chicagos disconnected youth shows that the Windy City has one of the three lowest rates of Latino
youth disconnection, 16.1 percent. Nonetheless, Latino youth are still twice as likely to be disconnected as white youth in
Chicago. The African American youth disconnection rate, 24 percent, is triple that of whites. Chicago neighborhoods are also
different worlds when it comes to youth disconnection. In the suburban North Shore communities of Highland Park and Lake
Forest, only about one in every thirty-four young people are disconnected, a rate of less than 3 percent. In the South Lawndale
and Lower West Side neighborhoods, more than one in every three youth is not in school and not working, a rate of nearly 35
percent.
4
5
6
7
8
3
-
7/27/2019 MOA-One in Seven
13/40
Baltimore residents have their high school diploma, compared to 83.6 percent of Dallas residents and 77.5 percent of Los
Angeles residents. In fact, Los Angeles has the lowest percentage of high-school-educated adults over 25 of all the metro areas
in this study. Baltimore residents are also more likely to have a bachelors or graduate degree than the residents of Dallas and
Los Angeles. Dallas and Los Angeles also have a much higher percentage of young residents who are neither enrolled in school
nor holders of a diploma or a GED; Los Angeles has the highest dropout rate of all the metro areas, at 26 percent, and Dallas is
fairly close behind with the third-highest dropout rate, 25.3 percent.
Baltimore also has the lowest poverty rate of these three cities at 11 percent, while Dallas is at 14.6 percent and Los
Angeles is at 16.3 percent. The unemployment rate for adults ages 16 and older is highest in Los Angeles at 12.1 percent, but is
about 9 percent in both Dallas and Baltimore. Poverty, adult educational attainment, and the unemployment rate all correlate
with youth disconnection. The fact that these three geographically distinct and otherwise dissimilar cities have all arrived at a
youth disconnection rate of 14.2 percent shows how different combinations of factors can affect the ability of young people to
remain engaged in school or to transition to a career.
Significant differences by neighborhood can be found, particularly in large, sprawling Los Angeles. In West Los Angeles,
the youth disconnection rate is 3.5; in now predominantly Latino Watts, the rate is 25.1 percent. Despite the differences among
the cities, however, the pattern of youth disconnection by race and ethnicity is quite similar.
Portland and Sacramento rank fourteenth and fifteenth, with a youth disconnection rate of 14.3. In terms of education, about
80 percent of Sacramentos school-aged children and youth are enrolled in school, the fifth-highest enrollment rate of the
metro areas in this study, while about 77 percent of Portland children and youth are enrolled. Portland also has a slightly higher
percentage of young residents who are not currently enrolled in school and also have not completed high school or a GED.
However, nearly 90 percent of Portlands adult residents have received high school diplomasslightly higher than Sacramentos
87 percent.Although Sacramento has a somewhat stronger enrollment rate among its young residents, it also has a higher poverty
rate, 15.1 percent. Portlands poverty rate, 13.4 percent, is two percentage points below the national rate. The unemployment
rate in Sacramento is about 13.8 percent for ages 16 and over, and Portlands unemployment rate is close behind at 12.5
percent.
Sacramento and Portland have very different racial and ethnic demographics. Portland is a majority white city (76.3
percent) and has the smallest population of African American residents of the largest metro areas, 2.7 percent. Portland has
one of the highest percentages of disconnected white youth, 13.5 percent. Sacramento, with a substantially smaller white
majority (55.7 percent), also has a fairly high percentage of white disconnected youth, 12.3 percent.
11
12
13
14
15
St. Louis and Denver, with a nearly tied youth disconnection rate of 13.4 percent, rank ninth and tenth. Both cities are in the
top ten in terms of the proportion of adults who have graduated high school; 88.8 percent and 88.9 percent of Denver and St.
Louis adults, respectively, have high school degrees. Furthermore, Denver and St. Louis also are among the three cities with the
greatest labor force participation of youth in this age group. About 64 percent of 16- to 24-year-olds in both Denver and St. Louis
participate in the labor force, which encourages youth connectedness in both these cities.
In Denver, the Latino disconnection rate is 19.1 percent, the African American rate is 15.8 percent, and the white rate is
11 percent, a smaller racial gap than that found in many other cities. In contrast, in St. Louis, the African American rate (23.1percent) is more than twice the white rate (10.6 percent).
Dallas, Los Angeles, and Baltimore, nearly tied with a disconnection rate of 14.2 percent, rank eleventh, twelfth, and
thirteenth. These three cities are quite different from one another. Los Angeles has a population twice the size of Dallas, and
Dallas has twice as many residents as Baltimore. Their racial and ethnic compositions also vary significantly. Latinos are a
plurality in Los Angeles, at about 44 percent, and whites constitute roughly 32 percent of the population. In Dallas, whites
(around 50 percent) and Latinos (nearly 28 percent) are the most populous groups, whereas in Baltimore, the majority of
residents are white (60 percent) or African American (roughly 28 percent).
TOTALDISCONNECTED
YOUTH (%)
AFRICANAMERICAN
ASIANAMERICAN
LATINO WHITE
METRO AREA D I S C O N N E C T E D Y O U T H ( % )
Dallas-Ft. Worth 14.2 21.4 ... 16.5 10.3Los Angeles 14.2 21.0 7.6 17.1 10.2
Baltimore 14.2 22.1 ... 18.4 9.7
9
10
In terms of education, the
relatively small city of Baltimore
has higher rates of educational
attainment than either Los
Angeles or Dallas. While schoolenrollment in Baltimore and
Dallas is about the same (around
77.5 percent), 87.7 percent of
-
7/27/2019 MOA-One in Seven
14/40
Seattles rate of youth disconnection is the same as the national average of 14.7 percent. In terms of education in the metro
area today, Seattle boasts a highly educated population, with 37 percent of adults having a bachelors degree or more. However,
without concerted attention, Seattles positioning as a city with a competitive workforce is in jeopardy: far too many young
people in the 16-to-24 age range have left school, with a dropout rate of over 18 percent.
While the overall rate is at the national average, African American disconnection in Seattle is astonishingly high, at 26.9
percent. More than one in four African Americans in Seattle are unmoored from school and work.
While the New York metro areas overall ranking is near the middle of this pack of twenty-five, closer examination of the city
with the greatest total number of disconnected youthalmost 350,000shows tremendous variation within the metro area by
geography and by race.
18
19
DISCONNECTED
YOUTH (%)
NYC Metro Area 15.2
Manhattan 12.3
Queens 13.3
Staten Island 14.0
Brooklyn 18.0
Bronx 22.3
encompasses a wider span than the five boroughs of New York City. It is nonetheless instructive to explore disconnection amongyouth in these boroughs. Rates range from the Bronx (22.3 percent) to Manhattan (12.3 percent).
Disconnection by Race and Ethnicity. As is the case in the country as a whole, youth disconnection is highest for African
Americans, followed by Latinos, Asians, and whites. However, two things stand out in New York. First is that while the rates for
African Americans and whites in New York are below the national average for those groups, for Latinos and Asian Americans,
rates are well above the average for those groups. Nearly 10 percent of New Yorks Asian American youth are disconnected,
considerably higher than the 8 percent U.S. average and the highest rate of the metro areas for which reliable data on
disconnection for Asian Americans are available. Similarly, the Latino rate is well above the 18.5 percent average and second
highest after Phoenix. These are areas for particular concern and action.
While both Houston (19) and TampaSt. Petersburg (18) have similar rates of youth disconnection, 15.7 percent, there is
important variation in associated factors facing teenagers and young adults. In Houston, a major challenge is educationboth
that of the adults in the community and for high-school-aged students. Houston ranks fairly low among major metro areas
in terms of adults who have competed high school. While in cities like Pittsburgh, Seattle, and Boston, over 90 percent have,
in Houston, only 81 percent of adults 25 and older have completed high school, the third-lowest rate after Los Angeles and
RiversideSan Bernardino. Because, as is discussed above, in places where adults have high levels of education, fewer youth
are disconnected, it is not surprising that Houston struggles with a dropout rate of one in four young people who have not
completed high school or a GED. Finally, while the overall rate of youth disconnection among Asian Americans nationally is the
lowest of any racial or ethnic group, at 8 percent, Houston has the second-highest percentage of Asian American disconnected
youth of the six metro areas in this study for which reliable data on this population are available, 8.5 percent.
TampaSt. Petersburg has a somewhat stronger educational foundation than Houston in terms of young people completing
high school. An area of particular challenge for this Florida metro area is very low median earnings (at just over $27,000
annually) and very high adult unemployment rates, 13.2 percent. In TampaSt. Petersburg, Latino youth are disproportionately
likely to be disconnected (nearly one in five are), yet this metro area also has one of the highest percentages of white
disconnected youth at 13.3 percent, the fourth-highest rating in the twenty-five largest metro areas after RiversideSan
Bernardino, Portland, and Detroit.
San Antonio has the highest rate of youth disconnection of the three largest Texas metro areas, 15.9 percent. Latinos make
up more than half of the population here. In San Antonio, several indicators that have a bearing on youth disconnection stand
out: the first is that median earnings are exceedingly lowthe typical worker in San Antonio can expect to earn under $27,000
annually from wages and salaries, the lowest earnings of the twenty-five largest metro areas and $4,000 less than in both
DallasFt. Worth and Houston. A second factor of concern is related to the choices and opportunities of teenage girls. San
Antonio has the highest rate of teen motherhood among the countrys largest metro areas, a rate nearly double the national
average.
16
17
Disconnection by Neighborhood. The New York metro area has the widest
gap by neighborhood in terms of youth disconnection of Americas largest cities. In
the communities of Hicksville, Bethpage, and Plainview in Nassau County on Long
Island, the rate of young adults not in school and not working is one tenth the rate
of the South Bronx neighborhoods of Mott Haven, Melrose, and Hunts Point in New
York City. These disparities map closely with disparities in the other associated
factors described in this brief: poverty, adult unemployment, and adult education
levels.
Disconnection by New York City Borough. The New York metro area
20
-
7/27/2019 MOA-One in Seven
15/40
Atlanta (21) and RiversideSan Bernardino (22) both have youth disconnection rates just under 17 percent. RiversideSan
Bernardino, one of the fastest-growing areas of California, has a very young populationnearly 30 percent of its residents are
under 18. Thus, tackling youth disconnection takes on particular urgency. On a set of indicators that are critical for this issue
child poverty, preschool enrollment, high school completionRiversideSan Bernardino has fallen behind. Nearly one in four
children under 18 live in poverty, and one in four teens and young adults dropped out of high school. RiversideSan Bernardino
also has the largest percentage of white disconnected youth of all the metro areas: 14.5 percent of white teenagers and young
adults are detached from both work and school.While Atlantas rate of youth disconnection is nearly identical to RiversideSan Bernardinos, some of the challenges it
faces are different. In Atlanta, the adult education level is high34 percent of adults today have at least a bachelors degree, as
compared with 28 percent for the United States and a far lower 20 percent in RiversideSan Bernardino. Yet the schools are not
retaining young people. More than one in four young people ages 16 to 24 have dropped out, the fourth-highest rate after Los
Angeles, Miami, and DallasFt. Worth. Finally, urban minority youth face the greatest obstacles to connection; Atlantas African
American youth are more likely to be disconnected than young people of any other race, and Latino rates are also above the
national average as well as that of RiversideSan Bernardino.
Detroit was hit hard by the Great Recession. The city has the highest youth unemployment rate (30 percent) and adult
unemployment rate (17 percent) of any of the twenty-five largest metro areas. Further analysis by neighborhood reveals that
the areas of Conant Gardens, Grixdale, and Krainz Woods have adult unemployment rates of nearly one in four (24 percent),
and youth disconnection in these areas is nearly twice that of Detroit overall (33 percent).
The data show that education is far less an obstacle in Detroit than diminished opportunities to enter the workforce.Detroit ranks fairly close to the national average in terms of both high school completion and higher education, yet its ranking
in terms of disconnection is among the five worst. Consistent with the analysis of the research brief on the challenges facing
particular groups, African Americans, who make up nearly 23 percent of Detroits population, often face additional obstacles
in the job market. Detroits African American youth have disconnection rates of 25.3 percent, as compared with 13.5 percent of
whites and 19.2 percent of Latinos.
The city of Miami and its surrounding suburbs have over 110,000 disconnected youthnearly one of every six teens and young
adults. This high rate of youth disconnection tracks closely with a very high poverty rate in Miami, among the highest among
the twenty-five largest metro areas, and the second-highest dropout rate, just after Los Angeles.
Elevated high school dropout rates for 16- to 24-year-olds are coupled with one of the highest youth unemployment
rates, more than one in four, leaving few options for a fulfilling and productive young adulthood for far too many young people
in Miami. Miamis violent crime rate is among the highest in Americas largest metro areas.
Phoenix ranks last of the nations twenty-five largest metro areas, with nearly one of every five teens and young adults neither
working nor in school. However, within Phoenix, not every group is struggling with youth disconnection. White teens and young
adults have a rate of disconnection that is somewhat higher than the national average for whites (13.3 percent) but below that
of several other large metro areas. The African American rate in Phoenix is twice that of whites (28.2 percent), and nearly 24
percent of Latino youth are disconnected. Latino youth disconnection is a particular challenge, as Latinos make up almost 30
percent of the total population.
Further analysis shows that youth employment is not the area of greatest challenge; unemployment in Phoenix for youth
ages 16 to 24 is virtually equal to the national unemployment rate for that age group. Instead, two other areas stand out. Only
55 percent of young people in this age group are enrolled in school, the lowest of any of the twenty-five metro areas, and the
rate of teen motherhood is twice that of Boston.
23
24
25
21
22
-
7/27/2019 MOA-One in Seven
16/40
ONE IN SEVEN | Ranking Youth Disconnection in the 25 Largest Metro Areas 13
DISCONNECTED YOUTH: GENDER
In 2007, young women were slightly more likely to be disconnected than
young men, which follows a historical trend in which young women have
been much more likely than young men to be out of both school andwork. But by the end of the Great Recession, the balance had shifted. The
ranks of the disconnected grew by 638,000 men, as compared to 194,000
women, over this period. Young men today outnumber young women
among the disconnected: 53 percent of young people not in school and
not working are men; 47 percent are women.
This shift is helping to close a long-standing gender imbalance in
rates of youth disconnection observed by a number of researchers. A
recent Congressional Research Service report, which employed a more
restricted definition of disconnection than the one used here, found that
the rate of disconnection among young women nationwide exceeded thatof young men every year from 1988 to 2008. The difference varied from
as little as about 20 percent in the mid-2000s to as much as 140 percent
in 1990.6 Levitan reported a similar historical gender imbalance in youth
BOX 1 Who Is Considered a Disconnected Youth?
Disconnected youth are people between the ages of 16 and 24 who are neither in school nor working. One of the
challenges of studying this population is that several different official data sources exist, each of which differs slightly
in what data they make available and for what segments of the population. The result is that researchers working
with different datasets, and often with different definitions of what constitutes disconnection, come up with different
numbers for this indicator. Measure of America has chosen to use the U.S. Census Bureaus American Community
Survey (ACS) for this research, chiefly because the ACS is reliable and updated annually, and because the survey
includes young people who are in institutional group quarters such as juvenile or adult correctional facilities and
supervised medical facilities.
Are part-time students considered disconnected
youth? No. All youth ages 16 to 24 who are in school,
whether full- or part-time, are considered connected.
Are part-time workers considered disconnected youth?
No. All full- and part-time workers ages 16 to 24 are
considered connected.
Are youth who are out of a job, but looking for work,
counted as disconnected youth? Yes. In this study, youth
who are looking for work are considered disconnected.
Some studies exclude from the disconnected category
young people who are actively looking for work.
How many disconnected youth live in institutions?
Of the 5.8 million disconnected youth in 2010, about
four hundred thousand live in residential institutions,
including juvenile or adult correctional facilities and
residential medical facilities, such as psychiatric units
or long-term-care hospitals.
Is a young person enrolled in a course of study
while in a residential correctional or medical facility
considered disconnected? No. In 2010 about 25percent of institutionalized young people were enrolled
in educational programs. These young people are
considered connected.
Are young people in the military considered
disconnected? No. In this study, young people who are
members of the armed forces are considered connected.
+ 194,000+ 638,000
Change innumber ofdisconnected
youth, 20072010
-
7/27/2019 MOA-One in Seven
17/40
ONE IN SEVEN | Ranking Youth Disconnection in the 25 Largest Metro Areas 14
disconnection up to the early 2000s.7 The gender flip that we see between
2007 and 2010 is thus part of a longer-term trend of greater attachment
to work and school among young women, particularly young women of
color, as compared to their male counterparts.
Disconnected young women are significantly more likely to be
mothers than connected young women, 35 percent as compared to 10percent. Within this group of disconnected young mothers, nearly one
in eight are still in their teens. The obvious conclusion is that becoming
a mother makes young women less likely to continue their schooling or
to start or continue working. Counterintuitively, however, research now
suggests that the causality typically works in the opposite direction:
with few appealing options and no education or career trajectory to
disrupt, disconnected young women see few advantages in postponing
motherhood.8
DISCONNECTED YOUTH: RACE AND ETHNICITY
Clearly the overall health of the economy and the job market matters
for youth connection; the ranks of the disconnected swelled significantly
during the Great Recession. However, the proportion of those who are
disconnected within each racial and ethnic group varies widely and
changed very little from 2007 to 2010. African American and Latino youth
are disproportionately represented among the ranks of disconnected
youth; white and Asian American youth are underrepresented (see
FIGURE 1 on page 16).
African American young people are the most likely to be
disconnected, as the more than one in five African American
youth holding this status today indicate. Even in metropolitan
areas with comparatively few young people not working or in
school overall, African American disconnection rates remain
stubbornly high. Employment is a particular challenge;
BOX 2 explores this issue. The largest gender gap in youth
disconnection is also found among African Americans; an
astonishing 26 percent of African American teenage boys and
young men are disconnected from school and work, compared to
19 percent of teenage girls and young women.
Latino youth also have a high rate of disconnection: 18.5 percent.
As with the African American rate, the Latino disconnection rate
remains high even when prevailing rates within metro areas are
comparatively low. Latinos are the only group in which young
women outnumber young men among the disconnected. Out-
Least Disconnectionfor African Americans
1. San Diego2. Boston3. Denver
Most Disconnection forAfrican Americans
21. Pittsburgh22. Seattle23. Phoenix
Least Disconnectionfor Latinos
1. Washington, DC2. San Diego3. Chicago
Most Disconnectionfor Latinos
20. Boston21. New York22. Phoenix
-
7/27/2019 MOA-One in Seven
18/40
ONE IN SEVEN | Ranking Youth Disconnection in the 25 Largest Metro Areas 15
BOX 2 African American and Latino Youth Face Different Challenges
A closer look at the two racial and ethnic groups with the highest rates of disconnection, African Americans and
Latinos, reveals that teens and young adults in each group face a somewhat different challenge.
Average African American school enrollment for this population, 59 percent, is just shy of the U.S. average.
However, African American youth ages 16 to 24 who arent in school struggle to find a place in the job market. This
situation holds especially for out-of-school African American men; the proportion of African American males in that
age range who are employed to the total population in that age range (called the employment-to-population ratio) is
nearly 22 percentage points lower than that for all young men.
On the other hand, Latinos have far lower school enrollment rates (53 percent) than African Americans, but those
who are not in school are far more likely to be working than their African American counterparts, with employment
rates in this group just under the national average. A sizeable gap in employment separates young Latino women and
men, however. Of those not enrolled in school, employment for Latino men is almost 15 percentage points higher than
that for Latino women. Young Latino women are, however, considerably more likely than their male counterparts to be
enrolled in school, reflecting a national trend (see TABLE 4).
TABLE 4 African Americans and Latinos Face Different Challenges
EMPLOYMENT-TO-
POPULATON RATIO
(% all youth 1624)
EMPLOYMENT-TO-
POPULATION RATIO
(% youth ages 1624 not
in school)
SCHOOL ENROLLMENT
(% ages 1624)
U.S. Total 45.7 61.9 61.4
All Females 46.6 60.3 64.4
All Males 45.0 63.2 58.6
African Americans 33.8 45.0 59.0
African American Females 37.3 49.5 62.3
African American Males 30.3 41.3 55.8
Latinos 44.5 60.7 53.0
Latino Females 40.9 52.3 57.4
Latino Males 47.8 66.9 49.2
Source: Measure of America analysis of U.S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey 2010 PUMS Microdata File.
Significant variation can be seen in rates of youth disconnection by race and ethnicity within each of thetwenty-five largest metro areas. For African Americans, San Diego, Boston, and Denver have relatively low rates of
disconnection. On the other hand, in Pittsburgh, Seattle, and Phoenix, young African Americans have more than a one
in four chance of being disconnected.
For Latinos, Washington, DC, has the lowest rate of youth disconnection, followed by San Diego and Chicago. At
the other end, rates in Boston, New York, and Phoenix are very high. While Boston has the lowest proportion of teens
and young adults adrift overall, at 9 percent, Bostons Latino youth are more than twice as likely to be disconnected, at
20.2 percent, placing Boston near the bottom of the ranking. (Rankings are not always out of twenty-five because some
metro areas do not have a sufficiently large population of a race or ethnicity to enable reliable calculations.)
of-school Latino young men are much more likely to be in the
workforce than their female counterparts. Young Latino women
have the highest female disconnection rate among the countrys
major ethnic and racial groups.
-
7/27/2019 MOA-One in Seven
19/40
ONE IN SEVEN | Ranking Youth Disconnection in the 25 Largest Metro Areas 16
U.S. Average 14.7
All U.S. females 14.1
All U.S. males 15.2
2010 Disconnected Youth byRace, Ethnicity, and Gender (%)
Whites 11.7
White females 11.1
White males 12.3
African Americans 22.5
African American females 19.0
African American males 26.0
Asian Americans 8.0
Asian American females 8.1
Asian American males 7.9
Latinos 18.5
Latino females 20.3
Latino males 16.8
Among whites, 11.7 percent of teenagers and young adults are
not connected to work or school, a rate that is lower than the
national average by 3 percentage points, yet more than one
in every ten white young people is still a significant number.
Whites make up 56.7 percent of young people in this age group
nationally, but only 45.2 percent of those who are disconnected.White male youth are slightly more likely to be disconnected than
their female counterparts12.3 percent as compared to 11.1
percent.
Asian American young people are the least likely to be
disconnected; only 8 percent of Asian Americans are, and
this number changed little from 2007. Asian American young
women and men differ little in terms of disconnection; the rate
differential between them is not statistically significant.
FIGURE 1 Disconnected Youth by Race and Ethnicity
Source: Measure of America analysis of U.S. Census Bureau, American CommunitySurvey 2010 PUMS Microdata.
PERCENTAGE
RACE AND ETHNICITY
AsianAmerican
Latino White
25
20
15
10
5
0African
American
8%
United States
14.7%11.7%
18.5%
22.5%
DISCONNECTED YOUTH: INTERNATIONAL COMPARISONS
The problem of youth disconnection is not confined to the United States;
other affluent democracies are also grappling with this critical issue andshare many similar challenges in youth employment related to structural
changes in the labor market and the effects of the global recession.
The U.S. rate of youth disconnection is higher than the average for the
countries of the European Union (see FIGURE 2).9 A significant range
exists among those countries, however. Rates in the Netherlands (4.1
percent), Denmark (5.7 percent), Norway (9.2 percent), and Germany
-
7/27/2019 MOA-One in Seven
20/40
ONE IN SEVEN | Ranking Youth Disconnection in the 25 Largest Metro Areas 17
(9.5 percent) are well below those of the United States, whereas Spain
and Italy have rates well above the United States. The United States
has a younger population than any of these European and Scandinavian
countries, underscoring the magnitude of its challenge.
Rates of disconnection in the United States were stable through the
mid-2000s at around 13 percent. But the total number of disconnectedyouth grew by more than 800,000 from 2007 to 2010, pushing their
share of the total youth population up nearly 2 percentage points, from
12.9 percent in 2007. The Great Recession had a similar effect in other
affluent countries. The erosion of low-skilled jobs that provide middle-
class wages is a fact of life in Europe as well as in America, driven by
technological change and automation and by outsourcing to cheaper
labor markets. And young people were more severely affected by the
global economic downturn than were adults. New labor-market entrants
still face greater barriers than experienced workers, leading to concerns
in Europe of a lost generation.10
But as the numbers in FIGURE 2show, countries have responded to these structural shifts in different
ways, yielding very different outcomes. Further discussion of successful
policies in some of these countries is found later in this report.
Source: OECD Project on Jobs for Youth, www.oecd.org/employment/youth.Note: Values presented in this table are the most current internationally comparable disconnected youth rates available. TheU.S. value differs slightly from that presented elsewhere in this report due to different reference years and minor definitionaldifferences between datasets.
FIGURE 2 Youth Disconnection in the United States and Other Affluent Democracies, 2011
DISCONNECTED
YOUTH
(%AGES1524) 20
15
10
5
0
NET
HER
LANDS
DEN
MAR
K
NORW
AY
GERM
ANY
CANAD
A
AUST
RIA
SWITZE
RLAN
D
FINLA
ND
U.S.
U.K.
ITALY
SPAIN
13.2%
4.1%
5.7%6.8%
8.6%9.2% 9.5%
10.5%11.4%
13.4%
14.8%
17.6%
19.5%
European Union
-
7/27/2019 MOA-One in Seven
21/40
ONE IN SEVEN | Ranking Youth Disconnection in the 25 Largest Metro Areas 18
Youth Disconnection:Why Does It Matter and Who Is at Risk?
THE LIFELONG CONSEQUENCES OF YOUTH DISCONNECTION
For many young people, the years that stretch from the mid-
teens to the mid-twenties are alive with possibilities; it is a period of
experimenting with and ultimately solidifying ones identity, gaining
work experience and educational credentials, building capacities for
independent decision-making, and developing the social as well as
emotional skills that enable productive and rewarding relationships with
colleagues, friends, and romantic partners.
Looking more closely at the first prong of connection, education,
the links between schooling and a better job and bigger paycheck
are well known. In 2010, for example, the median earnings of young
adults (ages 2534) with a bachelors degree were $45,000, compared
to $30,000 for those with just a high school diploma, and $21,000 for
those who did not graduate high school.11 Less widely discussed are the
links between education and a host of other benefits: higher civic and
political participation, greater ability to adjust to change, stronger and
more extensive social bonds, more stable relationships, and longer lives.
Education is a better predictor of health than either income or health
insurance coverage; better educated people tend to practice healthier
behaviors, are more likely to adhere to treatment regimens, and are
more effective in supporting healthy outcomes for their children.
The second prong of connection, employment,also has wide-ranging
positive effects.Research shows that participation in the labor force is, of
course, essential for earnings, but is also important for reasons that go
well beyond earning a salary and receiving benefits; employment matters
for social inclusion, self-reliance, and a sense of purpose, and has
tangible advantages for physical and psychological health.12
When young people miss out on these opportunities, they suffer
short- and long-term harm. The blows to ones self-confidence and
sense of self-efficacy at this critical juncture are painful and damaging,
as is the social isolation that often accompanies youth disconnection.In addition, disconnection in late adolescence and early adulthood
has deleterious effectssome researchers call it scarringacross
the life course.13 Failure to find work is distressing for anyone, but
unemployment in youth increases the risks of unemployment in later
life, both by limiting the ability of young adults to accumulate work
experience and skills and by signaling to potential future employers a
Median earnings of young
adults depend on educational
attainment (ages 2534)
MEDIANEARNINGS
$21,000
BACHELORSDEGREE
HIGH SCHOOLDIPLOMA
NO HIGH SCHOOLDIPLOMA
MEDIAN EARNINGS
$45,000
MEDIAN EARNINGS
$30,000
-
7/27/2019 MOA-One in Seven
22/40
ONE IN SEVEN | Ranking Youth Disconnection in the 25 Largest Metro Areas 19
lack of productivity. These scarring effects can manifest themselves
in other areas as well. Possible romantic partners can interpret
unemployment and lack of educational credentials as a sign of limited
earning potential or evidence of poor motivation, affecting ones personal
life. Researchers have also found that disconnection has scarring effects
on health, happiness, and job satisfactioneffects that endure yearslater.14
Why do limited opportunities, missed chances, and wrong turns in
adolescence and early adulthooda period increasingly understood as a
new life stage called emerging adulthoodexert such a powerful effect
on later life? The combination of new legal and social independence,
adult rights and consequences, and still-undeveloped cognitive abilities
make emerging adulthood a time rich in potential for joy and peril.
Emerging adults have adult bodies and, by age 18, most adult rights
(such as the rights to work, drive, vote, consent to sex, enter into
contracts, and join the military); they also face adult consequences fortheir actions (parenthood, adult criminal sentencing). Yet brain research
has now proven what a day spent among teenagers would suggest
namely that the part of the brain that makes decisions, weighs risk,
assesses likely consequences, predicts the effects of actions on others,
controls impulses, and plans for the future (the prefrontal cortex) doesnt
fully develop until the mid-twenties.15 Evidence also suggests that people
in this age group feel emotions with greater intensity than adults do.
In sum, these years, a stage of evolving social roles and identities,16
tend to set a persons long-term social and professional trajectory and
cement important relationships. When this stage of life helps move
young adults toward self-sufficiency and the attainment of valuable skills
and experiences, society reaps dividends for years to come. When young
adults fail to gain a foothold in mainstream school or work life in these
years, society pays a heavy price.
WHICH FACTORS ARE MOST CLOSELY ASSOCIATED WITH YOUTH
DISCONNECTION?
As described earlier, several Boston neighborhoods with very high
levels of youth disconnection are also places with comparatively
lower rates of educational attainment and employment, a pattern
that tends to be repeated across the twenty-five metro areas under
study. High rates of youth disconnection in the countrys twenty-five
most populous metropolitan areas are strongly associated with three
critical factors: poverty, adult unemployment, and low levels of adult
educational attainment. The analysis looks at all the Census-designated
Researchershave found thatdisconnection hasscarring effects onhealth, happiness,and job satisfactioneffects that endureyears later.
-
7/27/2019 MOA-One in Seven
23/40
ONE IN SEVEN | Ranking Youth Disconnection in the 25 Largest Metro Areas 20
neighborhood clusters that make up the twenty-five largest metro
areas. As discussed above, these clusters of neighborhoods are all
approximately equal in size, enabling apples-to-apples comparisons.
Poverty. Disconnected youth are, not surprisingly, considerably morelikely to come from disconnected communitiesareas in which high
rates of poverty are evidence of and contributors to isolation from
mainstream social and economic systems. A startling 39 percent of
disconnected youth live in households with incomes that fall below the
poverty line, compared with an already-high 21 percent of connected
youth. In terms of community conditions, one in five young people in
high-poverty metro neighborhoods are disconnected, as compared with
only about one in fourteen for youth in low-poverty neighborhoods (see
SIDEBAR). Low-poverty neighborhoods are those with a poverty rate
below 5 percent. High-poverty neighborhoods have a poverty rate ofabove 20.9 percent.
Adult Unemployment. In towns and communities with high levels of
adult unemployment, young people tend to be disconnected from work
and school as well (see FIGURE 3). Each dot below represents one
Disconnected Youth Are ThreeTimes as Likely to Come fromPoor Neighborhoods
Source: Measure of America analysisof U.S. Census Bureau AmericanCommunity Survey PUMS Microdata20062010. Note: Thresholds set at onestandard deviation above and below themean for all neighborhoods.
High-Poverty
Neighborhoods
Low-Poverty
Neighborhoods
DISCONNECTED
YOUTH
(%AGES
1624)
25
20
15
10
5
0
FIGURE 3 Communities with Low Adult Unemployment Tend to Have Fewer Disconnected Youth
ADULT UNEMPLOYMENT RATE (% AGES 25 AND OLDER)
DISCONNE
CTED
YOUTH
(%AGES1624)
DETROIT:Conant Gardens, Grixdale, Krainz
Woods neighborhoods
WASHINGTON, DC: Northwest
Adultunemployment
3%
Disconnectedyouth
3%
Adultunemployment
24%
Disconnectedyouth
33%
Source: Measure of America analysis of U.S. Census Bureau American Community Survey PUMS Microdata 20062010.
R2 = 0.4568
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
0 5 10 15 20 25
-
7/27/2019 MOA-One in Seven
24/40
ONE IN SEVEN | Ranking Youth Disconnection in the 25 Largest Metro Areas 21
neighborhood cluster (PUMA).
Adult Educational Attainment. Another strong link exists between
connectedness of young people to work or school and the educational
status of adults in their communities. Towns and neighborhoods in which
fewer adults have at least a four-year college degree have a far greaterproportion of disconnected young people (see FIGURE 4). In fact, the
positive benefits for the community seem to accelerate in impact, as is
shown by the logarithmic regression line, as the proportion of adults with
bachelors degrees in an area increases.
Why is the benefit of college-educated adults in a community so
important for youth connection? Adults with college degrees are better
able to contribute to their own childrens academic and labor market
success. In addition, the accelerating bonus demonstrated in the graph
shows that their presence in a community also contributes to the range
of opportunities open to young people outside their immediate families.For instance, college-educated adults have higher rates of volunteerism,
which could contribute to community opportunity through mentoring
programs or other forms of civic engagement. Finally, because those
with a college degree earn more, they tend to spend more in stores,
FIGURE 4 As the Proportion of Adults with a Bachelors Degree Increases, Disconnection among
Youth Declines Rapidly
NEW YORK: South Bronx
Adults withbachelors degrees
8.4%
Disconnectedyouth
36%
WASHINGTON,
Adults withbachelors degrees
84.5%
Disconnectedyouth
3%
Source: Measure of America analysis of U.S. Census Bureau American Community Survey PUMS Microdata 20062010.
DISCO
NNECTED
YOUTH
(%AGES1624)
ADULTS WITH A BACHELORS DEGREE OR HIGHER (% AGES 25 AND OLDER)
R2 = 0.58807
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
00
10 30 40 50 6020 70 80 90
DC: Northwest
-
7/27/2019 MOA-One in Seven
25/40
ONE IN SEVEN | Ranking Youth Disconnection in the 25 Largest Metro Areas 22
restaurants, and other businesses and thus support entry-level jobs in
the local community.
HOW DOES POVERTY FUEL YOUTH DISCONNECTION?
The data at the community level tell a clear story: educational,employment, and economic advantages in families and communities
combine to create a winning recipe for educational and employment
connection among young people; isolation, marginalization, low levels
of education and workforce attachment, and lack of material means
which together can be understood as human povertyare telltale signs
of disconnection. What accounts for this concentration of advantage and
disadvantage in different communities, and how does it contribute to
youth disconnection?
In his seminal book, When Work Disappears,17 William Julius
Wilson identified several economic and policy trends since 1970 thatdisproportionately harmed low-income communities of color in central
cities.
First is the drop in demand for unskilled laborwhich
resulted from a variety of critical shifts in the labor market,
most notably the spread of new technologies that displaced
less skilled workers, global outsourcing of manufacturing jobs,
and new trade policies that allowed comparatively inexpensive
imported goods into the U.S. market. The decline in domestic
manufacturing has left few places in the labor market for men
without at least a high school degree. Because, for generations,
discrimination kept African Americans from educational and
career opportunities, and because the educational attainment
of individuals is closely tied to their parents educational
attainment, African Americans are still disproportionately
represented among unskilled workers.
Second is the migration of jobs from central cities, where
low-income communities of color are more likely to be found,
to the suburbs. Public transportation rarely links poor, urban
neighborhoods to suburban office parks, and many low-income
African Americans living in central cities cant afford a car. The
result is less access to jobs.
Third is another migration to the suburbsthat of more affluent
African American families. In the past, racial segregation
meant that minority neighborhoods were home to a mix of
-
7/27/2019 MOA-One in Seven
26/40
ONE IN SEVEN | Ranking Youth Disconnection in the 25 Largest Metro Areas 23
professionals, working-class families, and the very poor. People
of color living in high-poverty neighborhoods have less contact
today with people of other classes who might help connect them
to opportunities, and they also have less exposure to norms and
behaviors that the workplace values.
In addition to these shifts, additional factors have added still-greater
distance to the gap separating affluent, largely white communities and
families from low-income communities and families of color: growing
inequality, the Great Recession, and rising incarceration rates.
Inequality. In 1970, families with children at the 90th percentile of the
income distribution had incomes 4.8 times higher than those at the 10th
percentile; since then, the ratio has increased by more than 100 percent,
with families at the 90th percentile now earning 10.6 times more thanfamilies at the 10th percentile.18
The Great Recession. The recession rained yet another blow on low-
income Americans. For instance, while median earnings dropped for all
workers over the 20072010 period (by 5.3 percent), those who never
completed high school saw a loss of earnings more than three times
what those with a graduate or professional degree saw9.8 percent vs.
2.8 percent.19 The unemployment rate for those without a high school
diploma went from 9.5 percent in prerecession 2007 to 16.5 percent in
2010, and the unemployment rate for those with just a high school degree
nearly doubled, from 6.2 percent to 11.8 percent.20
The result of these changes is a playing field for young people that is
anything but level. As the above analysis demonstrates, in the largest
U.S. cities, families and communities with high levels of education
and employment are well placed to help young people navigate the
sometimes rocky shoals separating childhood and adulthood. Parents
and neighbors have the networks to connect teens and young adults
to internships and first jobs, and the educational and labor market
experience to provide well-informed guidance. Families are more likely
to have the financial resources to support schooling through college and
often beyond.
In these communities, schools are well-funded and -staffed, and
parents tend to be quite active in shaping the range of choices open
to their children, including exerting considerable control over their
environments and laying plans to keep children productively occupied
after school and during the summer. In Measure of Americas work
The Least-Educated WereHardest Hit by the GreatRecession
Source: Measure of America analysisof U.S. Census Bureau AmericanCommunity Survey 2007, 2010; TableB23006.
2007 2010
0 5 10 15 20
Some college or associate degree
High school graduate
Less than high school
4.7
6.2
16.59.5
9.4
11.8
2.65.0
UNEMPLOYMENT RATE (%)
Bachelors degree or higherEDUCATIONALATTAINMENT
-
7/27/2019 MOA-One in Seven
27/40
ONE IN SEVEN | Ranking Youth Disconnection in the 25 Largest Metro Areas 24
on the Opportunity Index, a measure of opportunity at the county and
state levels, one very important finding is that states with high overall
opportunity also have high levels of civic participationfamilies
volunteering and mentoring; greater involvement in social, civic, or
religious groups; and other activities that build community trust and
solidarity.21
Absent a family crisis, a serious physical or mental illness, ora drug or alcohol dependency, disconnection from the worlds of school
and work is an unlikely outcome for children of affluence.
Families and communities with more limited means, particularly
those with low levels of educational attainment and where bouts of
unemployment are common, are less able to help their adolescents
prepare for an increasingly complex and demanding labor market.
Their dreams for and dedication to their children may be boundless, but
their resources are not. Low-income communities of color suffer from
a lack of public investment that leads to poor-quality schools, limited
transportation options, and few amenities. Low-income families tendto have social networks limited to others who share their straitened
circumstances, and they typically have less knowledge about and fewer
resources for higher education. In addition, studies show that children
growing up in disadvantaged families tend to assume adult roles earlier
by taking on household tasks, caring for younger siblings, contributing
economically to the household, or becoming parents at an early age.22
This adultification of adolescents in poor families stands in marked
contrast to the protracted period of dependence typical in more affluent
ones. Though these adult roles may offer young people in poverty a
valued place in their families and communities, such roles may interfere
with the development of skills, credentials, and networks that make
labor market success more likely. More affluent children are afforded the
luxury of time as well as financial, emotional, and social resources as
they transition to adulthood; poorer children often are not.
Rising rates of incarceration among African American men. As is clear
from page 16, the rate of disconnection among African American young
men calls for concerted attention and action. Research shows that even
when controlling for factors like parents education or poverty rates,
young African Americans, particularly boys and men, face more barriers
to labor-market success than do other young people.
Just as the disappearance of jobs from disproportionately African
American neighborhoods in central cities has hurt young men, so has
the skyrocketing rate of incarceration among young men of color. A
prison record deters employers, but research shows that ex-offenders
who are African American are far less likely than ex-offenders who are
white to be granted a job interview or be hired.23 In addition, because
Families andcommunitieswith high levels
of education andemployment arewell-placed tohelp young peoplenavigate the rockyshoals separatingchildhood andadulthood.
-
7/27/2019 MOA-One in Seven
28/40
ONE IN SEVEN | Ranking Youth Disconnection in the 25 Largest Metro Areas 25
significantly more black than white young men have criminal records,
even young African American men without criminal records appear to
suffer from guilt-by-association discrimination. A 2003 University of
Chicago study found that employers are more likely to give job interviews
to white applicants with criminal records than to equally well-qualified
African American applicants without criminal records. Last, rates ofout-of-wedlock parenthood, growing among all racial groups, are still
highest among African Americans, and some researchers argue that the
obligations of noncustodial fathers to pay child support (and the child
support orders that result when they do not) create serious disincentives
for employment.24
***
Teasing out the relative effects of race and ethnicity as opposed to
neighborhood characteristics like high-poverty communities is difficult.Evidence suggests that race is becoming less important, and income and
educational status more important, in shaping patterns of residential
segregation.25 While the declining significance of race in determining
residential patterns represents welcome and hard-earned progress,
the experience of living in a segregated neighborhood characterized
by poor-quality schools, limited transportation options, high rates of
crime, and few amenities can be harmful regardless of the reasons for it.
Because African Americans and Latinos are disproportionately poor and
have lower rates of employment and educational degree attainment, the
effect of residential segregation by income looks a lot like the effect of
residential segregation by race.
-
7/27/2019 MOA-One in Seven
29/40
ONE IN SEVEN | Ranking Youth Disconnection in the 25 Largest Metro Areas 26
The Way Forward:Preventing Disconnection
What is working today, in the United States and in other affluent
democracies, to keep at-risk young people connected or to reattach
them to the worlds of school and work? Today we are paying for failure;
investing in success by preventing disconnection in the first place is
cheaper by any measure and easier than reconnecting those who have
fallen out of the mainstream. But we cannot look away from the 5.8
million young people currently consigned to societys margins; for their
sakes and the nations, they need another chance. Thus, preventing
disconnection and fostering the reconnection of those currently adrift are
both critical.
ADDRESS THE UNEQUAL CONDITIONS OF DAILY LIFE
As the geographic analysis above shows, disconnected youth hail
disproportionately from disconnected families living in disconnected
neighborhoods. The gap in life chances between children in those
disconnected families and children in families either in the mainstream
or among the affluent is large and growing. The United States does far
less than many other countries to level the playing field, with the result
that the life chances of U.S. children and young people are uniquely tied
to the capabilities of their parents. Indeed, rich and poor children alike
in America are more likely to remain in the class of their parents than
American children in the past or European children today, the American
Dream notwithstanding.
Investments in public goods like schools and parks are generally far
lower, the United States has fewer universal public services like health
care and child care, and the nation does far less to protect its citizens
from the effects of misfortune than do most of its peer countries. Movingbeyond the rhetoric around caring about children to actually making sure
that all children live in safe, loving environments where their basic needs
for good nutrition, exercise, health care, quality education, security,
stability, and emotional connection are met is not rocket science, but it
requires different policy choices and greater public investment.
Today we arepaying for failure.Investing in successby preventingdisconnection ischeaper and easierthan reconnectingthose who have
fallen out of themainstream.
-
7/27/2019 MOA-One in Seven
30/40
ONE IN SEVEN | Ranking Youth Disconnection in the 25 Largest Metro Areas 27
SUPPORT ALL CHILDREN SO THAT THEY CAN ENTER SCHOOL ON AN
EQUAL FOOTING
While many assume that the effects of early childhood investments have
worn off long before the teens, research shows that the roots of highschool completion are planted many years earlier. Harm to cognitive,
social, and emotional development in the early years of a childs life sets
them on a lowered trajectory for achievement and well-being across
the life course. Interventions at this stage are highly effective and less
expensive than seeking remedies at a later point. Two approaches in
particular have consistently proven to pay tremendous dividends.
1. Support to parents to promote healthy child development.
At-risk parentsincluding those who are young, in fragile
relationships, lacking education, and living in poverty (many ofthem disconnected youth themselves)can learn the parenting
skills they need to become the moms and dads that they want to
be (and in many cases, that they themselves did not have). The
Nurse Family Partnership, for instance, in which young parents
receive parenting classes and home visits from specially trained
nurses starting during pregnancy, has proven, dramatic effects
on child well-being.26
2. Center-based preschool. Research shows that a high-quality,
center-based preschool leads to higher rates of high school
completion and greater job market participation later in life
for at-risk kids by teaching persistence, emotional regulation,
and other noncognitive skills. High-quality preschool programs
provide children with critical social and emotional skills that
compound over time, resulting in higher high school graduation
rates, less crime, fewer behavioral problems, fewer teen births,
greater workforce attachment, and higher wages.27
TAKE ACTION ON DROPOUT WARNING SIGNS
Everyone who drops out of school was once in school. Keeping them
there is easier and more cost-effective than luring back those who have
slipped from the educational systems grasp. By the eighth grade, the red
flags that a child will drop out of high school are already clear: repeating
a grade, failing more than one class, and frequent absence from school.
Such children require early identification, programs to address problems
Dropout Warning Signs:
Repeating a grade
Failing more thanone class
Frequent absencefrom school
-
7/27/2019 MOA-One in Seven
31/40
ONE IN SEVEN | Ranking Youth Disconnection in the 25 Largest Metro Areas 28
they may be having at home and at school, testing and treatment for
learning or behavioral disabilities, and action plans for keeping them on
track. They need engaging teachers and a relevant curriculum, one tha